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President Donald Trump appears to be playing both sides with his push to restore the names of Army bases previously honoring ...
Fort Rucker is back. But this time it’s not named for Confederate Colonel Edmund Rucker but for World War I Capt. Edward W. Rucker, a recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross. Rucker doesn’t have ...
Adams, renamed in 2023 for Black Army officers from South Carolina, to change it back to Fort Lee under plan from Donald ...
Two years ago, Fort Hood in Central Texas was changed to Fort Cavazos in honor of Gen. Richard Cavazos, the Army’s first ...
Sobrino de Botín, a restaurant in Madrid, Spain that's named the world's oldest restaurant by the Guinness World Record, is facing a challenge from another Madrid tavern that says its even older.
The Defense Department announced the changes shortly after President Donald Trump said he would push for the renamings.
Cities can be notorious for overcrowding, overtourism, and traffic, which is why cruises through their waterways are sometimes the best way to get to know them.
Seven Army bases whose names were changed in 2023 because they honored Confederate leaders are all reverting back to their ...
The move would reverse a yearslong effort to remove names and symbols honoring the Confederacy from the military.
After bringing back the name Fort Bragg to the post in North Carolina, President Donald Trump visited the base and announced ...
Service officials said the reverted base names will now have links to Army heroes instead of Confederate leaders.